Image

Sequoia’s Roelof Botha says the VC agency is not going to take sides in presidential election, laments ‘unhealthy’ partisan divide

While many of his peers have spent the last week rallying around who they will support in the 2024 election cycle, Sequoia Capital’s top partner Roelof Botha criticized the level of division in the country on Tuesday and said that his firm would not be choosing sides.

“At Sequoia as a partnership, we don’t take a political point of view,” Botha said Tuesday at the Fortune Brainstorm Tech conference in Park City, Utah. He added: “We’re proud of the fact that we’ve enabled many of our partners to express their respected individual views along the way, and given them that freedom.”

For his part, Botha said he is “not a registered member of either party,” and that he is “much more focused on the policies that will drive entrepreneurship, job creation, and making sure that the United States stays ahead.” 

Botha’s comments in an on-stage interview with Fortune Editor-in-Chief Alyson Shontell come as many of his venture capital peers are rallying support behind former President Donald Trump in the upcoming election. Just a few hours before Botha spoke on Tuesday, Marc Andreessen and Ben Horowitz published a video on YouTube in which they announced and explained their decision to back former President Trump in the upcoming election. Venture capitalist David Sacks of Craft Ventures, a former PayPal employee who worked with Botha there, spoke earlier on Tuesday at the Republican National Convention and a few weeks ago held a fundraiser for Donald Trump at his home. Trump’s newly announced running mate, J.D. Vance, himself had a brief stint in venture capital.

Botha focused his comments about the current state of politics on how there has been a significant increase in discord, emphasizing that the partisan divide in the U.S. had grown over the last 20 years. “I think it’s really unhealthy for the future of this country,” Botha said.

At the same time, he seemed to push back, if subtly, at the anti-immigration platform that currently animates much of the Republican party. 

The U.S. is an “incredible country” Botha said. “There’s a reason people like myself want to come here, there’s a reason about 40% of the founders we back are first generation immigrants.”

Read more coverage from Brainstorm Tech 2024:

Experts worry that a U.S.-China cold war could turn hot: ‘Everyone’s waiting for the shoe to drop in Asia’

Google chief scientist Jeff Dean: AI needs ‘algorithmic breakthroughs,’ and AI is not to blame for brunt of datacenter emissions increase

Wiz CEO says ‘consolidation in the security market is truly a necessity’ as reports swirl of $23 billion Google acquisition

Why Grindr’s CEO believes ‘synthetic employees’ are about to unleash a brutal talent war for tech startups

Recommended Newsletter:

CEO Daily provides key context for the news leaders need to know from across the world of business. Every weekday morning, more than 125,000 readers trust CEO Daily for insights about–and from inside–the C-suite. Subscribe Now.

SHARE THIS POST